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Featured researches published by Thi Phuong Quynh Le.


Frontiers in Microbiology | 2015

A short review of fecal indicator bacteria in tropical aquatic ecosystems: knowledge gaps and future directions

Emma Rochelle-Newall; Thi Mai Huong Nguyen; Thi Phuong Quynh Le; Oloth Sengtaheuanghoung; Olivier Ribolzi

Given the high numbers of deaths and the debilitating nature of diseases caused by the use of unclean water it is imperative that we have an understanding of the factors that control the dispersion of water borne pathogens and their respective indicators. This is all the more important in developing countries where significant proportions of the population often have little or no access to clean drinking water supplies. Moreover, and notwithstanding the importance of these bacteria in terms of public health, at present little work exists on the persistence, transfer and proliferation of these pathogens and their respective indicator organisms, e.g., fecal indicator bacteria (FIB) such as Escherichia coli and fecal coliforms in humid tropical systems, such as are found in South East Asia or in the tropical regions of Africa. Both FIB and the waterborne pathogens they are supposed to indicate are particularly susceptible to shifts in water flow and quality and the predicted increases in rainfall and floods due to climate change will only exacerbate the problems of contamination. This will be furthermore compounded by the increasing urbanization and agricultural intensification that developing regions are experiencing. Therefore, recognizing and understanding the link between human activities, natural process and microbial functioning and their ultimate impacts on human health are prerequisites for reducing the risks to the exposed populations. Most of the existing work in tropical systems has been based on the application of temperate indicator organisms, models and mechanisms regardless of their applicability or appropriateness for tropical environments. Here, we present a short review on the factors that control FIB dynamics in temperate systems and discuss their applicability to tropical environments. We then highlight some of the knowledge gaps in order to stimulate future research in this field in the tropics.


Biogeochemistry | 2012

N, P, Si budgets for the Red River Delta (northern Vietnam): how the delta affects river nutrient delivery to the sea

Thi Nguyet Minh Luu; Josette Garnier; Gilles Billen; Thi Phuong Quynh Le; Julien Némery; Didier Orange; Lan Anh Le

The Red River Delta (RRD) (Vietnam), a region experiencing rapid population growth, industrialization, and economic development, concentrates 54% of the population of the whole Red River watershed in less than 10% of the basin area. Our study aimed at understanding and quantifying the processes by which the delta affects the nutrient fluxes coming from the upstream watershed before they reach the sea. A comprehensive budget of nitrogen (N), phosphorus (P), and silica (Si) fluxes associated with natural and anthropogenic processes in the terrestrial and hydrological system of the delta was established for five sub-basins of the delta for the period 2000–2006, based on official statistical data, available measurements, and our own sampling campaigns and enquiries. The results show that anthropogenic inputs of N and P brought into the delta area are higher than the amounts delivered by the river from the upstream watershed. However, the amounts of these two elements ultimately delivered to the coastal zone from the delta are lower than the amounts carried by the upstream river, showing extremely efficient retention of both the soils and the delta’s drainage network. For Si (taking into account both dissolved and amorphous solid forms), the retention is much lower. High retention of N and P and low retention of Si in the delta area have up to now protected the coastal zone from severe eutrophication problems.


Global Biogeochemical Cycles | 2015

Phosphorus budget in the water‐agro‐food system at nested scales in two contrasted regions of the world (ASEAN‐8 and EU‐27)

Josette Garnier; Luis Lassaletta; Gilles Billen; Estela Romero; Bruna Grizzetti; Julien Némery; Thi Phuong Quynh Le; Chiara Pistocchi; Thi Nguyet Minh Luu; Lauriane Vilmin; Jean-Marcel Dorioz

Phosphorus (P) plays a strategic role in agricultural production as well as in the occurrence of freshwater and marine eutrophication episodes throughout the world. Moreover, the scarcity and uneven distribution of minable P resources is raising concerns about the sustainability of long-term exploitation. In this paper we analyze the P cycle in anthropic systems with an original multiscale approach (world region, country, and large basin scales) in two contrasting world regions representative of different trajectories in socioeconomic development for the 1961–2009 period: Europe (EU-27)/France and the Seine River Basin, and Asia (ASEAN-8)/Vietnam and the Red River Basin. Our approach highlights different trends in the agricultural and food production systems of the two regions. Whereas crop production increased until the 1980s in Europe and France and has stabilized thereafter, in ASEAN-8 and Vietnam it began to increase in the 1980s and it is still rising today. These trends are related to the increasing use of fertilizers, although in European countries the amount of fertilizers sharply decreased after the 1980s. On average, the total P delivered from rivers to the sea is 3 times higher for ASEAN-8 (300 kg P km−2 yr−1) than for EU-27 countries (100 kg P km−2 yr−1) and is twice as high in the Red River (200 kg P km−2 yr−1) than in the Seine River (110 kg P km−2 yr−1), with agricultural losses to water in ASEAN-8 3 times higher than in EU-27. Based on the P flux budgets, this study discusses early warnings and management options according to the particularities of the two world regions, newly integrating the perspective of surface water quality with agricultural issues (fertilizers, crop production, and surplus), food/feed exchanges, and diet, defining the so-called water-agro-food system.


Earth Surface Processes and Landforms | 2017

Total organic carbon fluxes of the Red River system (Vietnam)

Thi Phuong Quynh Le; Viet Nga Dao; Emma Rochelle-Newall; Josette Garnier; X.X. Lu; Gilles Billen; Thi Thuy Duong; Cuong Tu Ho; Henri Etcheber; Thi Mai Huong Nguyen; Thi Bich Ngoc Nguyen; Bich Thuy Nguyen; Nhu Da Le; Quoc Long Pham

Abstract Riverine transport of organic carbon from terrestrial ecosystems to the oceans plays an important role in the global carbon cycle. The Red River is located in Southeast Asia where river discharge, sediment loads and fluxes of elements (carbon, nitrogen and phosphorus) associated with suspended solids have been dramatically altered over past decades as a result of reservoir impoundment and land use, population, and climate change. Dissolved organic carbon (DOC) and particulate organic carbon (POC) concentrations were measured monthly at four stations of the Red River system from January 2008 to December 2010. The results reveal that POC changed synchronically with total suspended solids (TSS) concentration and with the river discharge, whereas no clear trend was observed for DOC concentration. The mean value of total organic carbon (TOC = DOC + POC) flux in the delta of the Red River was 31.5 × 1013 ± 4.0 × 1013 MgC.yr−1 (range 27.9–35.8 × 1013 MgC.yr−1 which leads to a specific TOC flux of 2012 ± 255 kgC.km−2.yr−1 during this 2008–2010 period. About 80% of the TOC flux was transferred to the estuary during the rainy season as a consequence of the higher river water discharge. The high mean value of the POC:Chl‐a ratio (1585 ± 870 mgC.mgChl‐a−1) and the moderate C:N ratio (7.3 ± 0.1) in the water column system suggest that organic carbon in the Red River system is mainly derived from erosion and soil leaching in the basin. The effect of two new dam impoundments in the Red River was also observable with lower TOC fluxes in 2010 compared with 2008. Copyright


Advances in Natural Sciences: Nanoscience and Nanotechnology | 2016

Inhibition effect of engineered silver nanoparticles to bloom forming cyanobacteria

Thi Thuy Duong; Thanh Son Le; Thi Thu Huong Tran; Trung Kien Nguyen; Cuong Tu Ho; Trong Hien Dao; Thi Phuong Quynh Le; Hoai Chau Nguyen; Dinh Kim Dang; Thi Thu Huong Le; Phuong Thu Ha

Silver nanoparticle (AgNP) has a wide range antibacterial effect and is extensively used in different aspects of medicine, food storage, household products, disinfectants, biomonitoring and environmental remediation etc. In the present study, we examined the growth inhibition effect of engineered silver nanoparticles against bloom forming cyanobacterial M. aeruginosa strain. AgNPs were synthesized by a chemical reduction method at room temperature and UV–Vis spectroscopy, scanning electron microscopy (SEM), transmission electron microscope (TEM) showed that they presented a maximum absorption at 410 nm and size range between 10 and 18 nm. M. aeruginosa cells exposed during 10 d to AgNPs to a range of concentrations from 0 to 1 mg l−1. The changes in cell density and morphology were used to measure the responses of the M. aeruginosa to AgNPs. The control and treatment units had a significant difference in terms of cell density and growth inhibition (p < 0.05). Increasing the concentration of AgNPs, a reduction of the cell growths in all treatment was observed. The inhibition efficiency was reached 98.7% at higher concentration of AgNPs nanoparticles. The term half maximal effective concentration (EC50) based on the cell growth measured by absorbance at 680 nm (A680) was 0.0075 mg l−1. The inhibition efficiency was 98.7% at high concentration of AgNPs (1 mg l−1). Image of SEM and TEM reflected a shrunk and damaged cell wall indicating toxicity of silver nanoparticles toward M. aeruginosa.


Environmental Science and Pollution Research | 2017

Impact of metal stress on the production of secondary metabolites in Pteris vittata L. and associated rhizosphere bacterial communities

Hoang Nam Pham; Serge Michalet; Josselin Bodillis; Tien Dat Nguyen; Thi Kieu Oanh Nguyen; Thi Phuong Quynh Le; Mohamed Haddad; Sylvie Nazaret; Marie-Geneviève Dijoux-Franca

Plants adapt to metal stress by modifying their metabolism including the production of secondary metabolites in plant tissues. Such changes may impact the diversity and functions of plant associated microbial communities. Our study aimed to evaluate the influence of metals on the secondary metabolism of plants and the indirect impact on rhizosphere bacterial communities. We then compared the secondary metabolites of the hyperaccumulator Pteris vittata L. collected from a contaminated mining site to a non-contaminated site in Vietnam and identified the discriminant metabolites. Our data showed a significant increase in chlorogenic acid derivatives and A-type procyanidin in plant roots at the contaminated site. We hypothesized that the intensive production of these compounds could be part of the antioxidant defense mechanism in response to metals. In parallel, the structure and diversity of bulk soil and rhizosphere communities was studied using high-throughput sequencing. The results showed strong differences in bacterial composition, characterized by the dominance of Proteobacteria and Nitrospira in the contaminated bulk soil, and the enrichment of some potential human pathogens, i.e., Acinetobacter, Mycobacterium, and Cupriavidus in P. vittata’s rhizosphere at the mining site. Overall, metal pollution modified the production of P. vittata secondary metabolites and altered the diversity and structure of bacterial communities. Further investigations are needed to understand whether the plant recruits specific bacteria to adapt to metal stress.


Aquatic Sciences | 2016

Impact of terrestrial runoff on organic matter, trophic state, and phytoplankton in a tropical, upland reservoir

Duc Anh Trinh; Thi Nguyet Minh Luu; Quan Hong Trinh; Hai Sy Tran; Tien Minh Tran; Thi Phuong Quynh Le; Thuy Thi Duong; Didier Orange; Jean L. Janeau; Thomas Pommier; Emma Rochelle-Newall

The impact of organic matter inputs from agricultural, forest and domestic sources on aquatic processes has been considerably less studied in tropical reservoirs relative to temperate systems despite the high number of these small aquatic systems in the tropics. Here we present the results of an in situ mesocosm study that examined the impact of allochthonous organic matter on a headwater reservoir in Northern Vietnam. We examined the impact of wastewater and soils from floodplain paddies, Acacia mangium plantations and from upland slopes on the metabolic status of the reservoir. The addition of floodplain paddy soils to the reservoir water led to a rapid switch in metabolic status from net autotrophic to net heterotrophic. In contrast, the addition of wastewater in low concentrations had less impact on the metabolic status of the reservoir, reflecting the low population density in the area. The addition of floodplain paddy soils also increased phytoplankton diversity and evenness relative to the control. In summary, soils from floodplain paddies and from A. mangium plantations had the highest impact on the reservoir, with upland soils and wastewater having less of an impact. We also found that primary production in this reservoir was nitrogen limited. In order to avoid accelerating the impact of runoff on the reservoir, future management options should perhaps focus on minimizing water and sediment runoff from upstream paddy fields and from A. mangium plantations. These results also underline the importance of studying these upland tropical water bodies that can contribute an important but, on the whole, ignored part of the global carbon balance.


Biogeosciences Discussions | 2017

CO 2 partial pressure and CO 2 emissions from the lower Red River (Vietnam)

Thi Phuong Quynh Le; Cyril Marchand; Cuong Tu Ho; Thi Thuy Duong; Huong Thi Mai Nguyen; Lu XiXi; Duy An Vu; Phuong Kieu Doan; Nhu Da Le

The Red River (Vietnam) is a good example of a South-East Asian river system, strongly 17 affected by climate and human activities. This study aims to quantify the spatial and seasonal 18 variability of carbon dynamic and CO2 outgassing at the water-air interface of the lower Red River 19 system. The monitoring of water quality and CO2 emission were carried out for 24h cyclings at the five 20 stations during the dry and monsoon seasons. The riverine water pCO2 was supersaturated with CO2 in 21 contrast to the atmospheric equilibrium (400 ppm), averaging about 1588.6 ± 884.6 ppm, thus resulting 22 in a water–air CO2 flux of 26.9 ± 18.4 mmol m -2 day. The CO2 outgassing rate was characterized by 23 significant spatial variations, highest at Hoa Binh station (Da River) due to the dam impoundment and 24 the highest river flow. Surprisingly, CO2 outgassing was higher in the day time (30.4 ± 21.2 mmol m 25 2 day) than in the night time (23.3 ± 15.4 mmol m day), probably as a result of the combined effect 26 of higher wind speed and water temperature in the day time. Seasonal differences were also observed, 27 higher in the wet season (30.7 ± 23.1 mmol m day) than in the dry season (23.0 ± 12.2 mmol m 28 2 day), due to higher river discharges and higher external inputs of organic matters from watersheds. 29 Conversely during dry season, temperature was among the main factors influencing C dynamic, with 30 higher pCO2 and fluxes, probably as a result of increased metabolic rates. 31


Natural Product Research | 2018

Anticyanobacterial phenolic constituents from the aerial parts of Eupatorium fortunei Turcz

Thanh Nga Pham; Huu Dien Pham; Dinh Kim Dang; Thi Thuy Duong; Thi Phuong Quynh Le; Quang Duong Nguyen; Dat Nguyen Tien

Abstract Four thymol derivatives and two phenolic compounds were isolated from the aerial parts of Eupatorium fortunei. The new structures were elucidated to be 7,8,9-trihydroxythymol (1), and 8,10-didehydro-7,9-dihydroxythymol (2) by means of MS and NMR analysis. The known compounds were identified as 8,9,10-trihydroxythymol (3), 10-acetoxy-8,9-dihydroxythymol (4), o-coumaric acid (5) and 4-(2-hydroxyethyl)benzaldehyde (6). Compound 3 showed strongest inhibitory effect on the growth of Microcystis aeruginosa in comparison with CuSO4.


Journal of Hydrology | 2007

The changing flow regime and sediment load of the Red River, Viet Nam

Thi Phuong Quynh Le; Josette Garnier; Billen Gilles; Théry Sylvain; Chau Van Minh

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Thi Thuy Duong

Vietnam Academy of Science and Technology

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Dinh Kim Dang

Vietnam Academy of Science and Technology

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Cuong Tu Ho

Vietnam Academy of Science and Technology

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Gilles Billen

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Thi Nguyet Vu

Vietnam Academy of Science and Technology

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Tu Cuong Ho

Vietnam Academy of Science and Technology

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Thi Nguyet Minh Luu

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Quoc Long Pham

Vietnam Academy of Science and Technology

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